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Description archivistique
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IE BCA ROSSE/G · Sous-fonds · 1540-2001
Fait partie de The Rosse Papers

Papers (almost exclusively estate and financial), c. 1540-2001, of the Wilmer Field family of Heaton Hall, Bradford, Yorkshire, whose co-heiress, Mary Field, married in 1836 Lord Oxmantown, later 3rd Earl of Rosse, including a few papers about the Heaton estate after its merger with the Rosse estates in Ireland.

The Rosse Papers
IE BCA ROSSE · collection · 1595
Sans titre
17th century letters and papers
IE BCA ROSSE/A · Sous-fonds · 1595-1699
Fait partie de The Rosse Papers

Seventeenth-century letters and papers, 1595-1699 and 1871 of the two branches of the Parsons family, the Parsonses of Bellamont, Co. Dublin, Viscounts Rosse, and the Parsonses of Parsonstown, alias Birr, King's County.

IE BCA ROSSE/Q/1 · Dossier · [1604: 1662]
Fait partie de The Rosse Papers

Original lease (1604) and 2 non-contemporary copy leases of ‘The Myrtle House’, Youghal, [former home of Sir Walter Ralegh], held by the Parsonses of Parsonstown under a lease from the [1st and Great] Earl of Cork.

Sans titre
Maps, plans and drawings
IE BCA ROSSE/O · Sous-fonds · 1610-1970
Fait partie de The Rosse Papers

Maps, plans and drawings, [c.1610], 1638, [c. 1690] and c. 1750-1790, mainly of a size which makes it physically convenient to form them into a separate section.

Leases of Boolanarrig, barony of Eglish
IE BCA ROSSE/Q/24 · Dossier · [1658-1834]
Fait partie de The Rosse Papers

Envelope of leases of Boolanarrig, barony of Eglish, the lease of 1801 being of a part of Boolanarrig called Clonmelin. [In date order.]

IE BCA ROSSE/Q/4 · Dossier · [1675-1781]
Fait partie de The Rosse Papers

c.25 leases of lands in the manor of Parsonstown, Co. Wexford, which reverted to the Parsonses of Parsonstown, King’s County, between 1708 and 1711, [and seems to have been settled by them on a younger son, Piggott Parsons, brother of Sir Laurence Parsons, 3rd Bt, on the failure of whose issue it seems to have reverted to the King’s County Parsonses, only to be used again as an appanage in the mid-19th century]. Some of the lands mentioned are Cullentrough, barony of Gorey; Ballyduff, Mangan,
Killenagh, Howell’s Land and Glascarrig, barony of Ballaghkeen; and parts of the manor of St John’s (Tomnegranoge, Knockmarshal, etc), barony of Bantry. [The documents are in date order and are ready for numbering, or rather re-numbering, as each has an obsolete number written on it.]